"Sergio Sanmiguel" <soundsorcerer.RemoveThis@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:0ef38237-dd70-40be-a007-727426e2af48@p25g2000hsf.googlegroups.com...
On Mar 19, 5:18 pm, "Charles Tomaras" <toma....RemoveThis@tomaras.com> wrote:
>> >"soundsteve" <uptheh....RemoveThis@oco.net> wrote in message
>> >news:492cc5ce-ddd7-4192-a31f-0adfbe6f630b@t54g2000hsg.googlegroups.com...
>> > Why on earth would you
>> >want a transcription of something when you don't know what the shot
>> >looks like or even where the camera is pointed?
>>
>> Often a writer can use the transcription for background information and
>> it
>> can also be used for track that is covered by other B-Roll.
>Time stamped TC on an mp3 should probably work well... But what do you
>do when you start recording & then camera decides to stop rolling and
>soon after resumes rolling without letting you know? This assuming
>you're recording manually as opposed to triggering your recorder with
>incoming TC...
You can't have TC ID3 tags with MP3 unless you have a recorder or a post
software application capable of recording them. The only way it works in the
field is if you have a recorder that auto rolls when the camera rolls and
stops when the camera stops and you get a separate file for each take or
start/stop cycle. (The SD 7xxt series will do this) If you are recording
timecode as an audio channel then the code generally just sits paused while
your recorder continues to roll on the paused code. But that type of file is
NOT a time stamped MP3, it's an MP3 file with LTC.
>> Stay informed about: Auto transcription recording